Hyderabad: About ten years ago, the then Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, while commenting on Sino-Indian relations said, "During the past 2,200 years, about 99.9 per cent of the time we have devoted to friendly cooperation between our two countries." The 0.1 per cent that the Chinese premier was referring to was the 1962 war waged against India by China, in gross violation of the spirit of Panchsheel agreement between the two countries.
Again, while there was a display of bonhomie between the leaders of the two countries at Wuhan and Mahabalipuram summits, the Beijing unleashed heavy deployments that caused dense clouds of war to hover around the borders. It is a welcome development that a destructive confrontation was averted, as a result of the conclusive efforts made in the past several months. The belligerence of Beijing was reigned-in by the Indian Army that promptly made moves to checkmate its strategic advances to snatch away disputed territories from India. The Indian army took the mountainous terrain into its grip to repulse the Chinese bellicosity.
The Central Government has informed the Parliament that the two countries would withdraw their forces in a phased manner with mutual coordination. Defense Minister Rajnath Singh claimed that latest agreement will, by and large, restore the pre-May first-week situation on the borders. Not even an inch of land will be ceded to the Chinese aggressors, he said. The Defense Minister also stated that until the positions of the two sides on the North and South banks of Pangong lake are decided, patrolling by both the countries will be halted.
However, experts on Sino-Indian affairs fear that by agreeing to halt patrolling in the area considered as its own territory, India would be risking the loss of militarily strategic locations. China is a belligerent country engaged in border conflicts with 18 neighbouring countries. Experts having full knowledge about China’s expansionist strategies are warning India not to capitulate to its duplicity designs. Such warnings cannot be taken lightly.